Harvey Weinstein Found Guilty Of Rape And Sexual Assault

The disgraced film mogul faces up to 25 years in prison.
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The disgraced former movie mogul Harvey Weinstein faces up to 25 years behind bars after being found guilty of rape and sexual assault charges on Monday.

The 67-year-old was found guilty of the third degree rape of Jessica Mann, a onetime aspiring actor, and the first degree sexual assault of Miriam “Mimi” Haleyi.

The New York jury acquitted Weinstein on two counts of predatory sexual assault, which carried a potential life sentence, and first degree rape of Mann. They took five days to reach a verdict.

In the minutes after the verdict was read in court, Weinstein was seen talking to his lead lawyer Donna Rotunno. He appeared expressionless, Reuters reports.

He now faces sentencing but Justice James Burke ordered Weinstein to be held in custody until then and he was put in handcuffs by officers in court.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance said at a news conference: “It’s a new day because Weinstein has finally been held accountable.”

He praised the jurors, saying: “Your verdict turned a page in our criminal justice system.

“To the survivors: I owe and we owe an immense debt of courage to you.”

Harvey Weinstein arrives at a Manhattan courthouse as jury deliberations continue in his rape trial on Monday
Harvey Weinstein arrives at a Manhattan courthouse as jury deliberations continue in his rape trial on Monday
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The trial represented a milestone in the Me Too era, spanning six weeks of often emotional witness testimony and gruelling cross-examination.

Weinstein pleaded not guilty to the five charges he faced, which stemmed from two incidents: Mann said Weinstein raped her in 2013, and former production assistant Haleyi said he sexually assaulted her in 2006.

Several other women, including former Sopranos actor Annabella Sciorra, also took the stand to demonstrate a pattern of misbehaviour.

Weinstein himself did not take the stand on advice from his attorneys, although he told reporters outside the courtroom that he would have liked to.

"I'm Harvey Weinstein-- you know what I can do."

Weinstein, whose signature throughout forty years of allegations was lack of accountability, has been declared guilty on two counts.

— jodikantor (@jodikantor) February 24, 2020

Jurors required clarification on how to assess the charges shortly after convening to begin deliberations on Tuesday last week, and on Wednesday appeared to hone in on Haleyi’s and Sciorra’s accusations, asking to review materials and testimony.

Dame Heather Rabbatts, chair of Time’s Up UK, has said that Harvey Weinstein’s conviction “marks a new era of justice” for victims of sexual misconduct.

In a statement to the PA news agency, she said: “This trial – and the jury’s decision today – marks a new era of justice, not just for the Silence Breakers, who spoke out at great personal risk, but for all survivors of harassment, abuse and assault at work.

“We owe a debt of gratitude to the survivors for their bravery and resolve as they faced Harvey Weinstein in court. We continue to believe them – all of them – and continue to be in solidarity with them.”

Since October 2017, when a pair of bombshell reports in The New York Times and The New Yorker detailed an array of disturbing accusations against the producer, more than 80 women – actors Asia Argento, Rose McGowan, Gwyneth Paltrow and Lupita Nyong’o among their ranks – came forward accusing him of sexual abuse.

But statutes of limitations and other factors prevented the vast majority from pursuing legal action.

The New York trial kicked off dramatically on January 6, when prosecutors in Los Angeles announced their own sex crime charges against Weinstein the same day he showed up to court in Manhattan using a walker for his supposed back pain.

The very next day, Weinstein managed to outrage New York state Supreme Court justice James Burke, who presided over the trial, by bringing four mobile phones into the courtroom in a flagrant violation of Burke’s no-phone rule.

Over 80 women have publicly accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual harassment, assault, or rape. Today is for them and the hundreds more who felt safer staying silent. https://t.co/0A8xk1u2mV

— Molly Knight (@molly_knight) February 24, 2020

Testimony in the case was often graphic. At certain points, though, the former mogul appeared to nod off in his seat.

Asked why, Weinstein merely scoffed and said: “Oh, please.”

Both of his main accusers, Haleyi and Mann, took the stand. Haleyi said she met Weinstein at a film premiere and later approached him looking for work. He gave her a job through The Weinstein Company, his now-defunct production outfit, working on the reality TV show Project Runway.

Haleyi said it was shortly before a July 2006 trip to Los Angeles, paid for by Weinstein’s company, that he assaulted her. He invited her to his Manhattan townhouse, pulled a tampon from her body and forcibly performed oral sex, she said.

“I just said: ‘No, no, I don’t want this to happen. This is not going to happen,’” she told the court.

Seven years later, Weinstein allegedly raped Mann, who told the jury she was still relatively new to Hollywood when she met Weinstein at a Los Angeles party, having been raised in a rural part of Washington state.

During an initial meeting, Mann ended up giving Weinstein a massage so that “he wouldn’t have to touch her,” prosecutor Meghan Hast told jurors.

Harvey Weinstein arrives at the courthouse during jury deliberations in his rape trial on Monday
Harvey Weinstein arrives at the courthouse during jury deliberations in his rape trial on Monday
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The producer then dangled movie roles to keep Mann in his orbit. In March 2013, after she invited him to a breakfast meeting at a hotel where she was staying – a Doubletree in midtown Manhattan – he came up to her room, injected himself with an erection medication and raped her.

Jurors were even shown photographs of the disgraced producer’s naked body in order to back up Mann’s descriptions of Weinstein’s “deformed” penis.

Both women said they continued to communicate with the producer afterward for the sake of their careers. Mann’s experience was particularly challenging for prosecutors, though, because her relationship with Weinstein included some consensual sex, which can make it more difficult to prove a rape accusation in a traditional courtroom setting.

Lead prosecutor Joan Illuzzi-Orbon portrayed Weinstein’s contact with his accusers as a way of maintaining control over them, “so that they wouldn’t one day walk out of the shadows and call him exactly what he was: an abusive rapist”.

“He was wrong,” Illuzzi-Orbon said in her closing argument.

We no longer have to use “alleged rapist” for Harvey Weinstein. Now it’s just rapist. He has officially been found guilty. May justice finally be served. #MeToo

— Dr. Jennifer Cassidy (@OxfordDiplomat) February 24, 2020

Weinstein’s attorneys, meanwhile, had tried to paint both Haleyi and Mann as liars and unreliable attention-seekers in their cross-examinations.

At one point, Mann broke down in tears after a defence lawyer asked her to read aloud an email she’d sent to an ex-boyfriend describing Weinstein as fatherly, writing that he “always offered to help in ways that my parents didn’t”.

The note revealed that Mann had been sexually abused years before she met the producer, at which point she began to sob. Burke adjourned for the day when the witness appeared to have a panic attack.

Outside of the courtroom, the defence whipped up a battle for public opinion. But Weinstein’s sole female attorney, Donna Rotunno, largely sparked outrage for making harsh and unfair judgements about women who are victims of sexual assault.

Essentially blaming such victims for making bad choices, she told a New York Times reporter: “I would never put myself in that position,” adding that she “never drank too much” or “put myself in any vulnerable circumstance, ever.”

At trial, the defence team produced emails Haleyi and Mann each sent Weinstein at various points after they said they were assaulted, attempting to show the relationship between Weinstein and his accusers was genial, even “loving”.

Gratitude to the brave women who’ve testified and to the jury for seeing through the dirty tactics of the defense .we will change the laws in the future so that rape victims are heard and not discredited and so that it’s easier for people to report their rapes

— Rosanna Arquette🌎✌🏼 (@RoArquette) February 24, 2020

Advocates for sexual assault survivors, however, say it is not uncommon for women to stay in friendly contact with an abuser or to struggle to break off contact, particularly when the abuser holds a position of power over them.

To bolster their image of Weinstein as a serial abuser, prosecutors called four other women to the stand to share their own stories.

Sciorra told the courtroom that Weinstein managed to get past her doorman, barge into her New York apartment and rape her in late 1993 or early 1994.

“I was punching him, I was kicking him, I was trying to get him away from me,” she testified. Actor Rosie Perez backed up her story, recalling a conversation she had with Sciorra shortly after the incident.

Tarale Wulff, a former waitress and aspiring actress, said Weinstein masturbated in front of her in a stairwell at her workplace in 2005.

Lauren Young, who wanted to be a model but was writing a screenplay, said Weinstein pulled a similar stunt in 2012 after pulling down her dress and groping her breasts.

Dawn Dunning, another aspiring actress, said Weinstein once slid his hand under her skirt and put his fingers in her vagina during a 2004 business meeting.

“This is how the industry works. How do you think other actresses got ahead?” she said Weinstein once told her.

Before being cast out of Hollywood, Weinstein was a prolific film producer with credits including Shakespeare in Love, The Lord of the Rings trilogy and Inglourious Basterds, among many other titles.

Over the past three years – with his production company shuttered and his reputation shredded – he has been forced into a muted life.

  • Rape Crisis services for women and girls who have been raped or have experienced sexual violence - 0808 802 9999
  • Survivors UK offers support for men and boys - 0203 598 3898
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